From Patch:
“9/11 Memorials Unfold Amid
Coronavirus Pandemic”
A pair of national tragedies —
the Sept. 11 terror attacks and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic — soon will
converge in New York City. On Friday, it will be 19 years since the former
World Trade Center’s towers fell, the Pentagon burned and Flight 93 crashed
into a field. Memorials that day will honor the 2,983 people who were killed in
those attacks, as they have every year since. They’ll also unfold amid the
coronavirus pandemic that has so far claimed 190,000 lives across the country
and claimed the city as its epicenter. COVID-19 nearly scuttled memorial
services and iconic “Tribute In Light” at the World Trade Center site. But they
will go on. Here’s how New York City will honor the victims of the 9/11 attack,
as well as those who died in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
9/11 Memorial Commemoration Every
year, beginning at about 8:30 a.m. the National September 11 Memorial &
Museum holds its the official memorial. Family members have read the names of
those lost beginning at 8:46 a.m. after a moment of silence, when the first
plane struck the the north tower in 2001. But this year, the Memorial
will be different to avoid spreading the new coronavirus. “This year,
the names, read by family members, will be broadcast via speakers placed at
multiple locations across the Memorial plaza,” the Memorial’s website states.
“Families may choose to stand near their loved ones’ names on the Memorial
pools or sit on benches under the trees, without fear of being too close to
others, as they listen. The names they will hear were beautifully and lovingly
recorded by family members for the Museum’s memorial exhibition, In Memoriam,
which honors—with emotion and devotion—every individual killed in the 9/11 and
1993 attacks.” The decision prompted Tunnel to Towers — a foundation
that supports first responders — to organize their own live reading of names near
Ground Zero. This alternative event will be attended by Vice President Mike
Pence and Second Lady Karen Pence, a foundation release stated. “The
horrific loss of life, from the largest attack on US soil, a terrorist attack,
requires that we read these names out loud, in person, on this day, every year.
We can never minimize that fateful day,” said Frank Siller, the foundation’s
chairman and CEO, in a statement. Siller lost his brother FDNY Firefighter
Stephen Siller in the attack.
Tribute In Light The twin beams of light commemorating the
fallen World Trace Center towers will shine Friday night. Coronavirus
concerns once threatened to blot out the display — and Tunnel to Towers also
promised to carry on the tradition — but it was resurrected after an outcry and
Gov. Andrew Cuomo stepped in. “The sheer volume of calls to shine the
Tribute in Light on the 19th anniversary was humbling,” said Alice M.
Greenwald, the Memorial & Museum’s president and CEO, in a statement.
‘There were multiple offers of assistance to help us stage the tribute in a
safe and appropriate fashion and mitigate the legitimate anxieties of the
production team and technicians. Governor Andrew Cuomo agreed to provide
resources, including health personnel, to help ensure the safety of the crew
and production staff. We are now able to go forward as a result of this
outpouring of concern and good will, with confidence that we are not placing
anyone at personal risk.” The lights will shine up from Lower Manhattan
from dusk Sept. 11 until dawn Sept. 12.
The Museum The 9/11
Memorial Museum will open only to 9/11 family members on Friday. The
following day it will reopen to the public after a months-long closure,the
museum’s website states. All Museum tickets — whether for the family event
or the five-day-a-week reopening — must be purchased in advance for social
distancing, according to the website.
^ It is important to remember
9-11 every single year no matter what else is going on around the country and
the world at the time. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/9-11-memorials-unfold-amid-204458336.html
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